نتایج جستجو برای: candida dubliniensis

تعداد نتایج: 30021  

Journal: :Revista iberoamericana de micologia 2001
M A Jabra-Rizk W A Falkler W G Merz A A Baqui J I Kelley T F Meiller

Microbial adherence to mucosal surfaces is an important first step in the initiation of the pathogenic process in the oral cavity. Candida albicans, the most adherent and pathogenic Candida species, utilizes a variety of mechanisms to adhere to human tissues. Although the strongest mechanism of adherence involves mannoprotein adhesins on C. albicans, cell surface hydrophobicity (CSH) plays an i...

Journal: :Revista iberoamericana de micologia 2001
R Salesa M D Moragues R Sota J Pemán G Quindós J Pontón

We report a case of fungemia caused by Candida dubliniensis in a non-HIV infected patient. Multiple cultures of blood performed over a period of 13 days were positive for this recently described yeast species. The C. dubliniensis isolates recovered were susceptible to fluconazole in vitro and the patient responded to intravenous therapy with this antifungal agent. It was possible to differentia...

Journal: :Indian journal of medical microbiology 2005
Z U Khan S Ahmad E Mokaddas N Al-Sweih R Chandy

A sunflower (Helianthus annuus) seed husk agar medium has been developed and evaluated for differentiation of Candida dubliniensis from Candida albicans on the basis of colony morphology and chlamydospore production. All C. dubliniensis isolates (n=40) produced rough colonies with hyphal fringes and abundant chlamydospores whereas 101 of 105 (96.2%) C. albicans isolates produced smooth colonies...

Journal: :Eukaryotic cell 2015
Claude Pujol Karla J Daniels David R Soll

Candida albicans and Candida dubliniensis are highly related species that share the same main developmental programs. In C. albicans, it has been demonstrated that the biofilms formed by strains heterozygous and homozygous at the mating type locus (MTL) differ functionally, but studies rarely identify the MTL configuration. This becomes a particular problem in studies of C. dubliniensis, given ...

Journal: Current Medical Mycology 2018
Parastoo Hassani Abharian, Parvin Dehghan, Peyman Hassani Abharian, Sepideh Tolouei,

Background and Purpose: Candida dubliniensis is closely related to the most pathogenic and prevalent yeast, namely C. albicans. Candida species can opportunistically overgrow in vulnerable individuals and cause a variety of diseases. The current study aimed to identify and isolate C. dubliniensis species present in the Candida albicans species complex identified in the oral cavity of drug abuse...

2013
Thomas P Moloney Joseph Park

BACKGROUND Recent studies have shown that the recently identified organism Candida dubliniensis is less pathogenic than the more common Candida albicans. Due to its rare nature, C. dubliniensis has been previously reported as the causative organism in endophthalmitis in only three cases. We undertook a multicenter, retrospective, consecutive case series to describe the clinical features and out...

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2008
Sebastian J. van Hal Damien Stark John Harkness Deborah Marriott

We present a case of Candida dubliniensis meningitis that developed 2 months after apparently successful treatment of an episode of C. dubliniensis candidemia in a heart-lung transplant recipient in Australia. This case highlights the importance of follow-up in patients with candidemia or disseminated infection, especially in immunosuppressed patients.

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 1998
I F Salkin W R Pruitt A A Padhye D Sullivan D Coleman D H Pincus

The conventional identification (assimilation profiles in the API 20C [bioMérieux Vitek, Inc., Hazelwood, Mo.] identification system, colony color on CHROMagar Candida [CHROMagar, Paris, France], and morphology on cornmealTween 80 agar) of 32 atypical isolates of Candida albicans recovered during a study of oropharyngeal candidiasis in human immunodeficiency virus-infected individuals could not...

Journal: :Microbiology 2004
Gary Moran Cheryl Stokes Sascha Thewes Bernhard Hube David C Coleman Derek Sullivan

Candida dubliniensis is a pathogenic yeast species closely related to Candida albicans. However, it is less frequently associated with human disease and displays reduced virulence in animal models of infection. Here comparative genomic hybridization was used in order to assess why C. dubliniensis is apparently less virulent than C. albicans. In these experiments the genomes of the two species w...

Journal: :Journal of clinical microbiology 2003
Laura Montour Rovena Tey Jianping Xu

This study reports the first isolation of Candida dubliniensis from North American Indians. Of 39 healthy human hosts sampled, two had C. dubliniensis. Genotypic analysis identified polymorphisms in these strains and differences from two reference strains. Our results suggest that yeast populations from indigenous communities in North America may be unique.

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